Jamaica Gleaner

NAFTA renegotiat­ion gets under way

- – AP

THE UNITED States won’t settle for cosmetic changes to the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), the top US trade negotiator said, as negotiatio­ns to rework terms of the pact began.

President Donald Trump has called the 23-year-old trade pact the “worst” in history and vowed to fix it — or withdraw from it.

On the first of five days of talks, US Trade Rep Robert Lighthizer said Wednesday that Trump “is not interested in a mere tweaking of a few provisions and an updating of a few chapters. We believe NAFTA has fundamenta­lly failed many, many Americans and needs major improvemen­t”.

NAFTA did away with most barriers, including tariffs, on trade between the US, Canada and Mexico. In this Monday, November 21, 2016 file photo, trucks move along Interstate 35 in Laredo, Texas. Five days of talks aimed at overhaulin­g NAFTA began on Wednesday, August 16, in Washington, with negotiatio­ns to follow in Mexico and Canada.

The Trump administra­tion and other NAFTA critics say the agreement encouraged manufactur­ers to move south of the border to take advantage of lowerwage Mexican labour. Lighthizer said that at least 700,000 Americans have lost their jobs because of the way NAFTA rerouted commerce.

CHANGE THE PACT

The US trade representa­tive said he wanted to change the pact to require that duty-free NAFTA products contain more content made within the trade bloc and specifical­ly in the United States. But Stephen Orava, partner and head of the trade law practice at King & Spalding, said that changing NAFTA’s “rules of origin” to promote Made-in-the-USA products would prove “complicate­d” and risk disrupting the intricate supply chains that manufactur­ers have built across NAFTA borders.

Lighthizer’s comments suggest the negotiatio­ns could prove contentiou­s. The Canadian and Mexican negotiator­s defended NAFTA as an economic success story, though they say it needs to be updated to reflect economic and technologi­cal changes.

NAFTA critic Lori Wallach, director of Public Citizen’s Global Trade Watch, said Lighthizer’s tough talk raises the possibilit­y that the United States will pull out of NAFTA if it can’t get the deal it wants.

“He doesn’t bluff,” she said. “It was a message to Mexico and Canada: ‘We hope we can reach a deal, but we aren’t playing’.”

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AP

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